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Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

author:European sea players

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Delft is a beautiful city in the Dutch province of South Holland. Delft is the city of the Dutch royal family, known as the Orange Legion. It all goes back to the 15th century, when Willem van Oranje lived and was murdered in Delft.

Founded around 1100, the town flourished in the 13th and 14th centuries due to weaving and trade. In the 15th century, a canal was dug on the Maas River to connect it with the small port of Delf Chavin and facilitate trade. In the 17th century, craftsmen began producing Delft pottery, a unique blue-and-white porcelain that was originally copied from Chinese porcelain. Delft pottery is still produced today, and the town also has a thriving university, known for its architecture department.

Delft's exquisite city centre, which blends rustic medieval grandeur with Golden Age glory, is a popular Dutch day trip destination, with a steady stream of tourists strolling the narrow streets and market centers lining the canals. The center is like a time capsule that has changed little since the golden age artist Johannes Vermeer, who was born in Delft and spent his life here, painted his famous Delft landscape in 1660-61.

Delft is known worldwide for its ties to Johannes Vermeer, Delft Blue Pottery and royalty. Wander through canals, churches, mansions, and courtyards and relive its glorious past. This university town also offers canal tours, museums, markets, and many bars.

Delft Trielement: Blue, Orange and Vermeer

Delft is the world-famous city of Delft blue porcelain, the birthplace of Johannes Vermeer, the "Master of Light", and has close ties to the royal family of Orange. Therefore, many tourist attractions are associated with one or more of these three icons.

When you think of Delft, you think of Delft Blue Pottery. That's right! Since its birth in the 17th century, this pottery has been prestigious and highly sought after. In addition, Delft remains the place where you can see and experience the authentic methods used to produce Delft blue pottery.

In the 17th century, Delft had more than 30 pottery factories. Royal Delft is the only surviving factory from that period. Here you can see and experience how pottery is handmade in a traditional and authentic setting.

Royal Delft

Royal Delft is the only remaining 17th-century pottery factory that still produces the world-famous Delft blue ceramics. You can see painters performing their craft with the same passion and energy in accordance with centuries-old tradition.

In the museum, you can admire all the highlights of the iconic collection of Delft Blue and Royal Delft pottery, such as the Blue and White Tulip Pyramid. During the Royal Delft experience, you can explore the complete history and learn about all the production processes of Royal Delft ware. Finally, you can take a stroll through the factory and observe the production process up close.

Prompt! A 25-minute walk along the Ceramic Road will take you to Royal Delft. But you can also take the Delft City Shuttle that stops outside Royal Delft.

Take the path of ceramics

The Ceramic Route lasts about an hour and takes you past Delft's various ceramic highlights. As you might expect, many Delft Blue exhibits are included. The route starts under the ancient chestnut trees of St. Agathaplein, where you can admire faience lampposts with Delft blueprints and Delft blue ceramic benches "in homage to Gaudí".

You can find the Ceramic Road here.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Marvel at the ceramic map

The ceramic map is a 17th-century map of Delft, made of mosaic tiles and ceramics. The miniature town hall, the miniature Molen de Roos and the miniature Hugo de Groot with wooden crates, are a feast for the eyes. Ceramic artist Nan Deardorff McClain created this unusual piece with the help of hundreds of volunteers. You can admire it in Papenstraat.

Tip: The Ceramic Map is also part of the Ceramic Road.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Decandral

A small pottery factory located in the heart of the city, Delft pottery is still made, painted and fired in the traditional way. You'll be amazed at the wide range of traditional and modern Delftware products on offer.

Blue tulips

In the blue tulips, also located in the city center, painters decorate each piece by hand in the traditional way.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

The right Delft Blue for you

The Delft Blue souvenirs you need are everywhere. The pottery factory in Delft offers a wide range of fine items. On the market square in the city centre, Delft Blue is displayed in shop windows almost everywhere. Everything from real Delft Blue pottery to lighthearted souvenirs. At De Blauwe Tulp and Madame Blue, you can watch artisans painting and decorating pottery in the traditional way.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Delft Blue Tulip Pyramid

The impressive Delft Blue Tulip Pyramid is located in the Land Art Delft Sculpture Park south of Delft. This vase is no less than 12 meters tall and is entirely hand-painted by artists from Royal Delft. It stands out, right next to the A13 motorway and surrounded by expansive gardens in an expansive sculpture park. Land Art Delft is open to visitors every day.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Discover Vermeer's Delft

Explore Vermeer's Delft

Delft's most famous maiden is the Delft painter Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675) The Maiden with a Pearl Earring. The 17th-century master of light lived and worked in Delft all his life. Of the estimated 45 paintings created during his lifetime, 37 can be seen in museums around the world.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Delft master Johannes Vermeer is world-famous. Only in Delft can you discover his city, the city that inspired him and the place where he lived and worked. From February 10 to June 4, 2023, you can explore Delft in Vermeer and immerse yourself in the world of the famous painter.

Experience the city of Dutch masters

In Delft, you can easily step into the scene of a painting by Johannes Vermeer. The historic city center, the Oude and Nieuwe Kerk (old and new churches), canals and townhouses take you back to the 17th century and bring the past back to life. As you stroll through Delft, you will experience the city of the painter himself.

Travel back in time and explore places related to his life, such as his birthplace, the house where he painted the famous Delft landscape, or the St. Luke's Guild, where the artists of the era gathered.

1. Prince Deerft Hof Museum/

At the Princeenhof Museum Delft, learn about the life of Johannes Vermeer and his contemporaries in Vermeer's Delft exhibition. For the first time, the life of Johannes Vermeer, his world and his association with Delft have become central themes of the exhibition. Discover the masterpieces of Delft's contemporaries as well as Vermeer-era Delft ceramics, Delft tapestries, archival objects, and personal documents. This exhibition will give you a comprehensive understanding of the artistic, intellectual and social atmosphere of Delft in the 17th century.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

2. VERMEER CENTRE DELFT

In the 17th and 18th centuries, Voldersgracht 21 was the seat of the Guild of St. Luke, and Vermeer followed in his father's footsteps by joining the guild as a member in 1653. Fine art painters, decorative painters, stained glass artists, sculptors, engravers, ceramists, printers, and art dealers can become guild members. Today, the Vermeer Delft Center is located here. Here you can admire a full-size replica of Vermeer's entire work. Take yourself back to the seventeenth century; Learn about his paintings, life, family and techniques.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

3. OUDE KERK (Old Church)

Johannes Vermeer was closely associated with the Oude Kerk Church in Delft. When his works became more recognizable in the 19th and 20th centuries, many visitors came to the church to honor him.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

4. Delft landscape/

Vermeer's View of Delft is the most famous cityscape of the Netherlands in the 17th century. It shows a view of the harbor on the south side drawn from a high-rise house on Hooikade. The interplay of light and shadow, the impressive cloudy sky and the subtle reflections in the water make this painting an absolute masterpiece!

It was a stunning view that you can still enjoy with your own eyes today. You'll find the exact location of Vermeer's View of Delft painting in Hooikade, Delft. Just a 10-minute walk from the city center.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

5. OOSTPOORT (East Gate)

The whole world is familiar with the Rotterdam Gate, even though it has been gone for almost two centuries. The gate is prominently displayed in a painting entitled "Landscape of Delft". At that time, the door was still standing. The gate has two spires and is very similar to the only remaining Delft city gate Oostpoort today. Walk through the majestic Oostpoort and briefly immerse yourself in the time of Vermeer.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

6. Side streets

There are various theories about the exact location of the side street. The neighborhood where Vlamingstraat was located was then a middle-class neighborhood inhabited by people with meagre salaries such as butchers and carpenters. The house depicted in this famous painting was the home of an aunt of Johannes Vermeer.

Keep in mind that Vlamingstraat is located in a residential area. Please do not block sidewalks or roads, do not linger too long and respect the privacy of residents.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Vermeer activities

In addition to these locations, Delft has a variety of Vermeer-related events where you can learn more about the famous painter! See full-scale replicas of the Dutch master's complete work at the Vermeer Centrum Delft, take a guided city tour about Vermeer, or step into one of Vermeer's paintings for photos in 17th-century costume. A special "Maiden with Pearl Earrings" beer or a delicious "Vermeer roll" is a must during your journey of discovery!

There's so much to see and do during Vermeer season! Order Vermeer) package to visit all the attractions on your wish list at a discounted price.

Delft: The City of Orange

Orange is the color of the Dutch royal family, and the Dutch have an almost obsessive fascination with orange. The flag of the Netherlands is also a red, white and blue flag, but the favorite color of the Dutch is orange, and one of the three elements of Delft is also orange.

The Dutch royal family is known as the Huis Oranje-Nassau dynasty. "Oranje" is pronounced like Orange and orange.

In the era of Willem van Oranje, Prince of Orange, the father of the Netherlands, the famous "Silent William", oranges became popular in Europe, and the Orange Nassau family found that the pronunciation of orange was so similar to their family name that they included the fruit in their family crest. In the war for independence, the words "Orange" and "orange" gradually penetrated into the hearts of the people and became symbols of independence and autonomy.

In the 16th century, 1572 to be exact, Wilhelm the Silent "Father of the Nation" came to Delft and led an uprising against the Spanish invaders. After defeating the Spaniards, he established the Netherlands as a parliamentary state, based on the principles of freedom of religion and freedom of speech. To some extent, the Netherlands was founded in Delft.

Delft has centuries-old ties with the Dutch royal family. This is the city where the silent William lived after fleeing Breda in 1572, where he was murdered twelve years later. But Delft's relationship with the Dutch royal family is also quite modern. The attractions of the Orange City of Delft have these to offer:

Prince Delft Museum (Prince's Museum Delft)

Museum Prinsenhof Delft。 The museum is the scene of one of the most important events in Dutch history: the assassination of William the Silent. William moved into St. Agatha's Abbey in 1572, which was subsequently renamed Princeenhof and eventually became the Princesenhof Museum in Delft. On July 10, 1584, he was shot by Balthasar Gerards while climbing stairs to his office. You can still see bullet holes in the walls of the museum...

Museum Prinsenhof Delft allows you to experience the history of the Netherlands. Experimentation and innovation have always played an important role in Delft's history. Many Delft artists and scientists have been at the forefront of new developments and have made significant contributions to the scientific and cultural development of the Netherlands. At the Museum Prinsenhof Delft, you can get to know famous Delft residents such as Johannes Vermeer, Michiel van Mierevelt, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek and Hugo de Groot. See for yourself how centuries of trade and commerce, engineering, art and science have brought prosperity to the Netherlands and changed the world.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

BAKERY THE DIAMOND RING

Today, it's a bakery where you can buy delicious rolls (a taste you won't forget!). ), but it was originally a hostel. On that fateful morning of July 10, 1584, Balthasar Gerards left the hotel with two loaded pistols to assassinate William the Silent. The window above the shop is the room where Baltasa Jeraz stayed the night before.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

MEDIEVAL PRISON "HET STEEN"

If you commit a crime in Delft in the Middle Ages, you will probably be locked up in this medieval prison. The man who assassinated William the Silent - Baltasar Gerards - was also imprisoned here. The "Het Steen" prison remains open to the public during the Dutch school holidays.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Old church

Around the corner of the Museum Prinsenhof Delft you'll find the Old Church, with its leaning tower that dominates the Delft skyline.

Not far from the new church is the old church, which is also known to locals as "Scheve Jan" (Crooked John) due to the strange kink of the tower.

New church

The impressive new church is about a 1-minute walk from the old church. Would you like to enjoy the best view of Delft? Then you have to climb the church tower with 376 steps.

The thin tower of the new church is about 110 meters high and has been a well-known landmark in Delft for centuries. If you climb the second tallest church tower in the Netherlands, you can enjoy stunning views of the city and surrounding area.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Canal cruise

Since Delft is one of the many beautiful and old cities in the Netherlands, this means that you will find beautiful canal houses, gorgeous streets, many monuments, and beautiful canals. Here you can find a walking tour where you should explore Delft's most beautiful streets and monuments on foot. This way, you can explore Delft like a local, off the beaten track. Visitors don't usually go further than the Market Square and one of Delft porcelain shops and museums.

You can also explore Delft from the water. In high season, hourly cruises surround romantic canals and stunning cityscapes. Or you can rent an electric boat or pedal boat so you can explore the city on your own on the water.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings
Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings
Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings
Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Art gallery Het Prinsenkwartier

If you're in the area, you might want to stop by Het Prinsenkwartier Art Museum. It is located next to the Prinsenhof Museum. Het Prinsenkwartier in Delft is a hub for the creative industries. Here you can find some exhibitions, debates and many other events.

Opening hours: Tuesday to Friday 10:00 – 17:30, Saturday and Sunday 11:00 – 17:00

Shop Kouwenhoven

Winkeltje Kouwenhoven is part of the Museum Prinsenhof Delft and is located next to the museum. This cute little shop is an authentic shop selling typical Dutch nostalgic products. The interior is over a hundred years old, making this shop one of the loveliest shops in Delft that you should visit. You can buy old Dutch sweets, toys, books and much more.

Opening hours: Tuesday to Sunday 13:00 – 16:45. Winkeltje Kouwenhoven is open on Sundays in the second and fourth week of every month.

Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings
Delft: Studied with Chinese Delft Blue, influenced Dutch royal orange and Vermeer paintings

Recommended places to have breakfast and dinner in Delft

Bij Best is located on a small street behind Nieuwe Kerk (New Church). Bij Best serves breakfast throughout the day. You can find amazing street food, fresh juices, and much more. But what really sets Bij Best apart is the incorporation of Indonesian dishes into their food.

The Living is an interesting restaurant in Delft. The Living is one of the best restaurants in Delft, but it's a little different from what you might think. The Living has several seats, but no toilets. At The Living, you pay for food by weight. €2.15 per 100 grams, €3.50 for a serving of soup.

The reason they do this is because at The Living they want to reduce food waste. They also offer only products with the smallest ecological footprint. This means that if you're looking for vegan or vegan restaurants/takeaways in Delft, The Living is the place for you. About 80% of their food is vegetarian, and everything is 100% vegan. The menu changes every two weeks.

How to travel to Delft

From Amsterdam: The easiest way to get from Amsterdam to Delft is by train. From Amsterdam Centraal take the train to Vlissingen. Get off at Delft train station. This will take you about an hour.

From Rotterdam: The best way to get from Rotterdam to Delft is by train from Rotterdam Central Station. Take the train bound for Amsterdam Centraal or Den Haag Centraal. Drop off in Delft. This will take you about 15 minutes of your time.

From The Hague: To travel to Delft from The Hague, take the train from Den Haag Centraal to Eindhoven or Dordrecht. Drop off in Delft. This will take you about 12 minutes of your time.

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